Water utilities are beginning to move from reacting to failures toward predicting them before they happen.

Mick O’Dwyer of SwiftComply says compliance programs have traditionally been reactive — responding after a backflow device fails, a sewer blockage forms, or contamination risks emerge. But with larger datasets and smarter technology, utilities are increasingly able to anticipate problems earlier and prioritize inspections and maintenance based on real-world performance trends.

O’Dwyer points to backflow prevention as one example. With more than 1.5 million assemblies tracked in SwiftComply’s system, utilities can analyze average lifespans, failure patterns, and historical performance data to better predict which devices may be at greater risk of failure. That allows utilities to focus resources more strategically instead of relying only on fixed schedules or responding after incidents occur.

Episode at https://bit.ly/UtilityCompliance

waterloop is a nonprofit news outlet exploring solutions for water sustainability.
Visit https://www.waterloop.org/

Subscribe to catch every video: https://www.youtube.com/@waterloop

Never miss an episode! Subscribe to waterloop:
🎧 Spotify:https://bit.ly/waterloopSpotify
🎧 Apple Podcasts:https://bit.ly/waterloopApple
🎧 YouTube Podcasts:https://bit.ly/waterloopYouTubePod

Follow waterloop for more stories on water sustainability:
🔹 Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/the_waterloop/
🔹 LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/company/thewaterloop

#WaterInfrastructure #DrinkingWater #WaterUtilities #SmartWater #WaterTechnology #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #Backflow #PredictiveMaintenance #WaterQuality #Infrastructure #UtilityManagement #CleanWater #DigitalTransformation #PublicWorks #WaterInnovation #Compliance #EnvironmentalProtection #SwiftComply #waterloop